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Measuring Change and Monitoring Targets Using Administrative Data: Some examples (not based on housing data) Matt Perkins Office of the Chief Statistician.

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Presentation on theme: "Measuring Change and Monitoring Targets Using Administrative Data: Some examples (not based on housing data) Matt Perkins Office of the Chief Statistician."— Presentation transcript:

1 Measuring Change and Monitoring Targets Using Administrative Data: Some examples (not based on housing data) Matt Perkins Office of the Chief Statistician

2 Why administrative data? Low cost - Already collected Covers whole population (nearly) –Minority groups –Small area BUT –Definitions may not be what you want proxies? –System changes –Control over what’s collected? –Tend to measure inputs and outputs

3 What to use? Source of data –What is the collection process Quality Assurance –What is being measured / counted –Ideally a bi-product of admin process Frequency of collection Revisions to data eg –Benefit applications –Reoffending

4 Quality Assurance Administrative data isn’t always right. Errors at different stages –System set up / form design (get involved) –Data capture –Data transfer Speak to data collectors / owners / experts –How much QA of data? And of what? Do your own QA

5 Measuring change – When is a change not a change? Seasonality Externalities Randomness An example - unemployment

6 Source: NOMIS

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13 Using administrative data - Things to consider (part 1) External Factors eg –crime rates and drugs –Harold Shipman –encouragement to report crimes Randomness / Small numbers –Similar issue to surveys –Population size, not sample size Time series are important A health example..

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17 Breast feeding - the data SO1002629200620072008 Children examined386 No. breast feeding250 SO1002616200620072008 Children examined522 No. breast feeding520 Source: Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics

18 Using administrative data - Things to consider (part 2) Behaviour changes as a result of targets Subjects Inputters Relative vs Actual improvement An example..

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21 Summary Know your source, talk to the experts Quality Assurance Look at all the data Explanatory factors –Real –Methodological Think carefully about sub-sets

22 Further information National Sources: –Scottish Government (www.scotland.gov.uk/topics/statistics)www.scotland.gov.uk/topics/statistics Sources and suitability pages –Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics (www.sns.gov.uk)www.sns.gov.uk –General Register Office Scotland (www.gro-scotland.gov.uk)www.gro-scotland.gov.uk –ISD Scotland (http://www.isdscotland.org)http://www.isdscotland.org –ScotPho (http://www.scotpho.org.uk/)http://www.scotpho.org.uk/ –Scotstat (www.scotland.gov.uk/topics/statistics/Scotstat)www.scotland.gov.uk/topics/statistics/Scotstat Local Sources –Knowfife Contacts –matt.perkins@scotland.gsi.gov.ukmatt.perkins@scotland.gsi.gov.uk –Statistics.enquiries@scotland.gsi.gov.ukStatistics.enquiries@scotland.gsi.gov.uk –neighbourhood.statistics@scotland.gsi.gov.ukneighbourhood.statistics@scotland.gsi.gov.uk


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